The Oklahoman

Show them you mean business

- Curtis Honeycutt Curtis Honeycutt is a national awardwinni­ng syndicated humor columnist. Connect with him on Twitter (@ curtishone­ycutt) or at curtishone­ycutt. com. curtishone­ycutt.com

You’ve gone over your expertly tailored business suit with your lithium battery-powered lint roller in the executive bathroom. You’ve humbly positioned your luxury watch so it peeks just so outside your shirt cuffs (which are crisp and precisely the right length). Now you’re assuming your power stance at the front of the conference room, getting ready to share your big PowerPoint presentati­on (or — as it’s known in startup circles — your “slide deck”).

You’re about to deliver a crushing dose of Six Sigma business power to the other suits sitting around the conference table who flew in for this meeting in their corporate jets. But, to get the seven-figure multinatio­nal merger deal done, you’re going to need one more key ingredient: power verbs.

That’s right — power verbs. We all know that verbs are action words, but some of them are puny, anemic and overused. If you use weak verbs in your presentati­on, the overseas investors are going to start yawning and looking at their own (probably Swiss) luxury watches, wondering at which Michelin-star restaurant they should dine later tonight.

Let’s take the word “said” as an example. It’s boring, yet we drop it in by default into our everyday communicat­ion. Instead, consider more powerful verbs like yelled, demanded, explained or insisted.

“Walk” is another verb that screams “weak sauce.” No one just “walks” anymore, unless you want to walk straight to the unemployme­nt office. Instead, consider using strut, dart, march, mosey or meander. See what I mean? Talk about “walking” like a boss, and you’ll soon be the boss. You can almost smell the rich mahogany of your boss desk, can’t you?

Now let’s take a look at “look.” No one even gives it a second glance. Instead of look, use a more creative, evocative word like gape, examine, notice, glare or stare.

Finally, let’s talk about “talk.” Talking is for career midlevel managers (at best). Instead, use a stronger verb like spout, reveal, divulge, gab or mumble. Power verbs will win you friends and influence people — especially executive corporate vice presidents of overseas fiduciary acquisitio­ns.

Using power verbs will knock the designer socks off your potential investors. Replacing boring, vanilla verbs with power verbs will give you an instant air of confidence and success. This tact will win you fans everywhere.

 ?? [THINKSTOCK PHOTO] ?? Should you find some power verbs to go with your power suit? Grammar Guy has suggestion­s.
[THINKSTOCK PHOTO] Should you find some power verbs to go with your power suit? Grammar Guy has suggestion­s.
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